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We strolled back across the years and the moments we think are some of the scariest to ever come out of Murphy and American Horror Story. Some are pure horror, without punches pulled. Dead bodies, murder, monsters, and mayhem are all present, even if they’re just meeting for dinner or trying to scare some actors on a TV set.
1) Piggy Piggy

The pig-head-clad killer Piggy Man makes several appearances throughout American Horror Story, but his introduction carries special weight way back in the first season’s sixth episode, “Piggy Piggy.” Eric Stonestreet plays a patient of Ben (Dylan McDermott), and he recounts the story of Piggy Man, a former murderous butcher who wore a pig mask before his murders. Roanoke adds a lot more to the urban myth connected to the monster’s attacks, revealing him to be Kincaid Polk. While it is a shock to see him pop up for real later, the first moments might be the scariest.
Stonestreet plays quite the opposite of his Modern Family role, clearly pushed to his limits by his fear of Piggy Man. It also ends up being the end of his life at the end of the episode. After imagining Piggy Man attacking him while hiding in the shower, Stonestreet tries to summon the beast for real later. While speaking the words into the mirror, a burglar who was hiding in the shower takes offense and shoots Stonestreet just as he finishes the chant.
2) Violet’s Discovery

One of most shocking moments in American Horror Story Season 1 comes after we’ve spent a lot of time with Violet (Taissa Farmiga), including her suicide attempt in the Episode 6. Her point of view helps the audience navigate, and we’ve managed to get in touch with her point of view to this point. Only it turns out we didn’t really and we’ve been watching her ghost interact with everybody.
As Tate reveals, the true Violet never survived her suicide attempt tying her ghost to the house like the others. Her body was hidden in the crawlspace by Tate, later shown to her ghost while with bugs crawl over the deceased’s corpse. This hammers home that the Harmon’s daughter isn’t coming back and that everybody was a potential victim. It was the first time the show succeeded in hiding twists that were coming, but not the last.
3) Ma Petite’s Fate

This is one of the less graphic deaths in the entire series, might be the most heartbreaking. It also shows the true horror in the aftermath, especially when your mind starts to wander. In Season 4, AHS went to the Freak Show, introducing a lot of odd characters and a few cruel ones to boot. Ma Petite is one of the good odd ones, played by Jyoti Kishanji Amge – also known as the world’s shortest woman.
In the series, she portrays Ma Petite, the beloved little person member of the Freak Show troupe and an easy target for con artists Maggie and Stanley. After getting Wendell “Dell” Toledo (Michael Chiklis) to smother her to death, Ma Petite ends up in a glass jar in Lillian Hemmings’ Museum of Morbid Curiosities. In an alternate look, before Dell is revealed to be the killer, Stanley himself does the deed by drowning the little woman in formaldehyde. The harrowing scene shows Ma Petite struggle, cry to be let out of the jar, and then is held under the liquid by Stanley. Either death is horrible, but the latter is harder to watch. Her fate remains the same, which is genuinely the worst part. Trapped forever inside a jar in a museum.
4) Tate’s Past

Most viewers knew that Tate Langdon was a troubled boy from his first appearance in AHS‘ first season. He is possibly the darkest resident of the Murder House, and that’s unrelated to the reveal that he is the Leather Man. Before the Harmons move into the home, Tate had perpetrated a school massacre that left 15 students dead at Westfield High School in 1994.
The imagery of that day plays out much like Tate’s supposed fantasy he describes to Ben Harmon at the start of the series, where he paints the skull on his face. During the real shooting, he puts on a black leather coat, packs a shotgun, combs his hair back, and takes his time shooting people at the school. The students in the library get an extra bit of spotlight as they return later as ghosts to spill Tate’s secret to Violet. It’s also an early example of Ryan Murphy pulling from real life, as the Columbine shooters allegedly taunted victims in the library during their spree.
5) Infantata

Also in “Murder House” is the youngest monster we’ve seen on the series. Infantata, real name Thaddeus Montgomery, is the reconstituted remains of Charles and Nora Montgomery’s child. Taking cues from the Lindbergh Baby case, the Montgomerys have their child taken and dismembered. This leaves Dr. Charles Montgomery to sew the body back together, steal a heart from a fetus taken from one of the many abortions he performed in the home, and bring their child back to life.
The result is a little beast that bites Nora Montgomery when she tries to nurse him, leading to her stabbing the child with a letter opener. She was unsuccessful, killing herself and her husband as a result. The Infantata now lives in the basement of the house, killing trespassers and sneaking around in the night.













